News, 20 September 2001
A health authority in Scotland has decided to make the abortifacient
morning-after pill available from pharmacists free of charge and is
considering whether to apply the scheme to girls under the age of 16.
At present, women over 16 throughout the UK can obtain the
morning-after pill from pharmacists without a doctor's prescription at
a cost of 20 pounds. The Ayrshire and Arran primary care trust plans
to make the drug available without charge from selected chemists from
November, and the trust's senior prescribing officer revealed that a
decision had not yet been made on whether to supply the drug to women
irrespective of age or only to those over 16. The Catholic Church and
pro-lifers condemned the plan, but Alison Strath, Scottish chairman of
the Royal Pharmaceutical Society, welcomed it. The Fife primary care
trust, also in Scotland, is considering a similar move. [
Scotland on
Sunday, 16 September]
An appeals court in Bordeaux, France, has ruled that a doctor who
failed to tell a pregnant woman that her unborn daughter would be
handicapped so that she could have her aborted must pay the child's
family around 600,000 francs (58,000 British pounds) in compensation.
The court said that the doctor had been negligent in letting Alicia,
who is now 10 years old, be born. The French National Ethics Committee
and groups representing the disabled have criticised the judgement.
[
EWTN News, 19 September]
In response to the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Centre last
week, Planned Parenthood of New York City (PPNYC) has announced that
it is offering free abortions for a limited period. PPNYC is offering
"complete reproductive health care", including the provision of
medical and surgical abortions, free of charge from 18 to 22
September. [
LifeSite, 19 September]
A committee of the Australian federal parliament has recommended a ban
on all human cloning and on the creation of embryos for research. The
committee was split on whether to recommend the authorisation of
research on spare IVF embryos, of whom there are an estimated 60,000
in frozen storage throughout Australia. [Ananova, 20 September]
The government of India has announced plans to enforce and tighten the
current guidelines which regulate the movement of human embryos in
research programmes. In future, the transfer of any embryonic cell
lines to researchers abroad will require government permission, the
consent of the donor [i.e. the unborn victim's parents], and a
commitment to share with the donor any pecuniary benefit arising from
the use of the embryo. [
M2 Communications Ltd., 18 September; via
Northern Light]
An Indonesian maid and her boyfriend have both been sent to prison in
Singapore for illegally procuring an abortion. [Abortion is legal in
Singapore but must be performed by a registered medical practitioner.]
Roslan Osman, aged 36, gave Dwi Astuti, his 24-year-old girlfriend,
two batches of anti-ulcer stomach pills to induce abortion. When the
child was born dead, his mother hid the body in a shoe box which was
then discovered by her employer. The judge said that it was in the
public interest to impose a deterrent sentence. [
The Straits Times, 20
September]
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